Perceived arousal of facial expressions of emotion modulates the N170, regardless of emotional category: time domain and time-frequency dynamics

Pedro R. Almeida, Fernando Ferreira-Santos, Pedro L. Chaves, Tiago O. Paiva*, Fernando Barbosa, João Marques-Teixeira

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

38 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Findings concerning the emotional modulation of the N170 component of the visual event-related potential are mixed. In the present report we tested the hypothesis that the emotional modulation of the N170 may be driven by the perceived emotional arousal of the stimuli, rather than by specific emotional categories.Fifty-four participants viewed facial expressions of anger, disgust, fear and happiness, plus low arousal neutral faces. All emotional categories were matched in arousal, while stimuli within each category varied parametrically in this dimension. The modulation of the electrocortical activity on the N170 time-window was analyzed in the time domain and via time-frequency decomposition. The effects of emotion and arousal were analyzed separately.In the time domain N170 amplitudes co-varied parametrically with perceived arousal, regardless of emotional category. This modulation was linearly associated with the power of the theta, alpha, and beta frequency bands. Moreover, fear was associated with a trend for increased N170 amplitudes, enhanced alpha power, and increased broad band inter-trial phase coherence.These results support the views that a) the activity in N170 time window is fundamentally modulated by perceived arousal, b) the modulation of the N170 may be the product of an increased evoked response, rather than the result of phase resetting processes, and c) facial expressions of fear retain some processing primacy, that may be related to their increased value as environmental cues.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)48-56
Number of pages9
JournalInternational Journal of Psychophysiology
Volume99
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2016

Keywords

  • EEG/ERP
  • Facial expressions of emotion
  • N170
  • Perceived arousal

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